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  • Yemen clashes bring Saudi and UAE-backed forces into confrontation

    Yemen clashes bring Saudi and UAE-backed forces into confrontation


    Emir Nader,Jerusalemand

    Suaad Al Salahi,Yemen

    Reuters Forces of Yemen's separatist Southern Transitional Council arrive in a mountainous area at the start of an offensive in the southern province of Abyan, Yemen (15 December 2025)Reuters

    The separatist Southern Transitional Council’s forces launched offensives in eastern Yemen last month

    Yemen’s future hangs in the balance after a dramatic turn of events in the south which have brought Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates into unprecedented direct confrontation and threaten the country with partition.

    Both Gulf powers have intervened on behalf of Yemen’s internationally recognised government in the country’s long-running civil war, but a fracturing of the alliance has seen them backing different rival groups on the ground, one of whom is now pushing to declare the independence of a breakaway state in southern Yemen.

    On Friday, the UAE-backed force declared that a “war” had begun, accusing Saudi-backed ground forces of launching an attack alongside air strikes by the Saudi air force.

    Yemen’s civil war broke out in 2014 and has plunged the already impoverished country into years of deadly violence and one of the world’s worst hunger crises.

    A map shows Yemen and which areas are controlled by the Houthis, Yemeni government-affiliated forces, anti-Houthi National Resistance forces, anti-Houthi STC-affiliated forces and Hadrami Elite forces.

    At the start of the war, the Iran-backed rebel Houthi movement took control of most of northern Yemen, including the capital Sanaa, from the government. The conflict escalated in 2015, when a coalition of Arab states including Saudi Arabia and the UAE launched a military campaign to restore the government’s rule.

    A ceasefire has de-escalated the conflict with the Houthis in recent years and led to a freezing of the front lines.

    But the Saudi-backed ruling coalition – the Presidential Leadership Council (PLC), formed in 2022 and designed to unite various anti-Houthi factions – has frayed.

    At the same time, the vast majority of southern Yemen has been taken by UAE-backed separatists, the Southern Transitional Council (STC), which is formally part of the coalition.

    Reuters Forces of Yemen's separatist Southern Transitional Council arrive in a mountainous area at the start of an offensive in the southern province of Abyan, Yemen (15 December 2025)Reuters

    Saudi Arabia warned the UAE that offensives in eastern Yemen constituted threats to its security

    The infighting escalated on 2 December, when the STC – which seeks an independent state in the south – launched a large-scale military offensive in the east of the country and rapidly took control of territory from government forces. The STC’s advances included the oil-rich Hadramawt province that borders Saudi Arabia.

    The STC said the offensive was necessary to “restore stability” in the south. But it was denounced as a “rebellion” by the head of the PLC, Rashad al-Alimi, who said the STC’s separatist push threatened to fracture Yemen and plunge the region into chaos.

    Tensions have further escalated with air strikes by the Saudi-led coalition. On Friday, seven people were killed in an air strike on an STC military camp in Hadramawt, an STC official said.

    That followed air strikes on Tuesday on the southern port of Mukalla, where the coalition accused the UAE of delivering two ships loaded with military equipment to the separatists over the weekend. No casualties were reported but images of burnt-out vehicles shared on social media after the strikes suggested the strikes directly targeted the UAE hardware.

    AFP Burned-out military vehicles and pick-up trucks following a Saudi-led coalition air strike in Mukalla, southern Yemen (30 December 2025)AFP

    The Saudi-led coalition air strike on Mukalla destroyed a number of military vehicles and pick-up trucks

    The UAE foreign ministry denied the allegations, saying the shipment did not contain weapons and that the vehicles were to be used by Emirati forces in the country.

    Following Tuesday’s strikes, the head of Yemen’s Presidential Council said it had cancelled a joint defence treaty with the UAE and ordered all its forces to leave the country within 24 hours.

    The Saudi foreign ministry backed the call for the Emirati forces to leave, accusing the UAE of pressuring the STC to launch the offensive in the east, which has reached Saudi Arabia’s borders. The ministry warned that Saudi Arabia’s national security was a “red line”.

    The UAE denied it was behind the STC’s recent military campaign but, in a move that was unexpected to many, hours later it conceded to the demand and agreed to withdraw its forces from Yemen.

    The UAE’s motivations in supporting the STC in Yemen are seen as helping it secure access to key sea ports and challenging an Islamist party that sits in the government.

    But even if the UAE fully removes its physical presence in Yemen, it “won’t change anything” and does not signify a backdown of the STC forces it supports, says Farea al-Muslimi, a researcher at Chatham House.

    “The UAE hasn’t had a significant troop presence in Yemen since 2019. It has relied on special forces and mostly its network of proxies working directly on the ground,” says Mr Muslimi.

    EPA A displaced Yemeni woman prepares food for her family at a makeshift camp in Sanaa, Yemen (24 December 2025)EPA

    More than 19 million people require humanitarian assistance in Yemen

    In the newly contested areas like Hadramawt, the prospect of a wider conflagration of fighting is alarming families.

    “Some people are thinking of going to villages or staying with relatives if things get worse. But most people don’t really have the option to leave the city,” says Mohamed from Mukalla.

    “Most people are going out less [and] have stored some goods like flour and rice. Everyone is following the news closely, moment by moment.”

    Years of devastating conflict have ravaged Yemen’s economy. The country’s roughly 40 million people have endured what aid agencies say is the world’s third worst hunger crisis – one that has repeatedly threatened to reach famine levels. In 2021, the UN estimated that 377,000 people had died as a result of the conflict and its impact on hunger and healthcare, of which 259,000 were said to be children under the age of five.

    While the current conflict is being framed from the outside as an emerging proxy war between two Gulf powers, close watchers of Yemeni politics have seen the recent escalations by the STC as a long time coming.

    The STC’s ambitions have risen after its recent expansion of control over nearly all of the south of the country, Yemeni affairs journalist Anwar al-Ansi told BBC Arabic.

    “[STC chief Aidarous] Al-Zubaidi has been the most consistent person inside Yemen, consistently demanding independence for southern Yemen. So, no, I don’t think he will give up,” says Mr Muslimi.

    Reuters A flag of the UAE-backed separatist Southern Transitional Council (STC) flutters on a military pick-up truck at a rally by STC supporters in Aden, Yemen (1 January 2026)Reuters

    The Southern Transitional Council wants an independent state in south Yemen

    Speaking to the BBC, Anwar al-Tamimi, a spokesperson for the STC confirmed their aspirations.

    “Our intentions have always been clear for years and that is to establish an independent state, we haven’t tried to fool anyone,” he said.

    “It’s the right of the people of the south to choose their fate, unfortunately many in the region have tried to stand in our way.”

    He denied independence would be a threat to Saudi Arabia’s national security.

    “We will have stability and won’t be a source of terrorism that threatens them,” he said.

    Whether these assurances will be enough to prevent Saudi-backed forces attempting to reclaim their grip on southern Yemen is unclear.

    “The UAE and Saudi Arabia cannot and will not be able to agree in Yemen. They have a very different logic on the ground,” says Mr Muslimi. “Saudi has 1,500km of border with Yemen while the UAE has zero.

    “Imagine having the UK and France going directly into a war with each other – that is the same way I think about the UAE and Saudi Arabia. They are rich and powerful countries with lots of weapons and it’s very bad for the whole region.”



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  • Earthquake interrupts Mexico’s president during press conference

    Earthquake interrupts Mexico’s president during press conference


    President Claudia Sheinbaum calmly stopped her press conference when the 6.5 magnitude trembler shook the room and set off the country’s earthquake alert system.

    The quake shook Guerrero, Mexico, early Friday, disrupting Sheinbaum’s first news conference of the year. Some residents rushed into the streets after hearing the Mexican Seismic Alert System, which was put into place following the deadly 1985 earthquake that killed at least 5,000 people.

    Video shows buildings shaking in Mexico City and cars trembling in Acapulco, Guerrero.

    The epicenter was near the town of San Marcos, close to the Pacific coast resort of Acapulco, according to Mexico’s national seismological agency. No injuries or major damage were reported.



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  • What images and videos tell us about why Swiss bar fire spread so quickly

    What images and videos tell us about why Swiss bar fire spread so quickly


    Richard Irvine-Brown, Kevin Nguyen and Kayleen DevlinBBC Verify

    BBC A branded image with the BBC Verify logo, with a blue border surrounding an image of sparklers attached to champagne bottles being held up by people in the Swiss ski resort bar just before the fire started - with a small orange patch of fire seen on a foam ceiling above the sparklers.BBC

    Investigators are racing to establish how and why the deadly New Year’s Eve fire at a bar in a Swiss ski resort spread so rapidly.

    Authorities on Friday said in a press conference that sparklers attached to champagne bottles that were held “too close to the ceiling” appear to have started the blaze in the basement of Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana.

    But how the fire took hold with such ferocity, killing at least 40 people and leaving 119 injured, many seriously, is now a key focus for officials – as is the bar’s safety record.

    ​​BBC Verify has been examining videos taken by survivors and onlookers and speaking to fire safety experts to find clues about what went wrong.

    Bottles with sparklers held in the air

    Two striking images shared widely online show people carrying champagne bottles with lit sparklers above their heads, with a crowd around them.

    One image shows flames starting to gather on the ceiling above people holding five of these bottles aloft.

    People hold sparklers attached to champagne bottles in the Swiss ski resort bar just before the fire started - with a small orange patch of fire seen on what looks like a foam ceiling above the sparklers.

    The second image is a closer-up angle, showing a person wearing a crash helmet and holding a bottle with a lit sparkler, sitting on the shoulders of another person wearing a Guy Fawkes mask.

    The sparks from this bottle appear to be closer to the ceiling.

    A person wearing a motorbike helmet sits on the shoulders of another person. Both of them are holding champagne bottles with sparklers attached, close to the ceiling and walking through a bar busy with people.

    ​​BBC Verify determined these images were taken after midnight on 1 January by confirming there were not earlier versions and matched them against public photos of Le Constellation – using details including the bar design and distinctive pipework.

    And there was no evidence the images had been ​​manipulated using artificial intelligence (AI).

    In other videos we verified from the night of the fire, some people in the bar can be seen filming the flames as loud club music thumps in the background. In one video, some people start to hurry for an exit stairwell while shouting.

    On Friday, Béatrice Pilloud, the attorney-general of the Valais region, said everything led investigators to believe the fire had started from sparklers attached to bottles of champagne that were “moved too close to the ceiling”.

    Questions about foam padding on ceiling

    Another focus is on foam-like padding on the bar’s ceiling and whether it was compliant with safety standards.

    Two fire safety experts told BBC Verify that the materials visible in photos and videos of Le Constellation appeared to show “egg box foam”, a type of sound-absorbing material made from polyurethane (PU).

    In the photo of the bottles being held up, flames are visible on a part of the ceiling with a foam-like covering.

    PU foam is often treated with fire-retardant before being installed as a noise dampener in factories and entertainment venues.

    But untreated, it can be highly flammable.

    “Once ignited, polyurethane acoustic foam can exhibit rapid flame spread across its high-surface-area profile and produce dense, toxic smoke, significantly accelerating fire growth and reducing available escape time,” said Dr Peter Wilkinson of Loughborough University.

    Professor Edwin Galea, from the University of Greenwich, said the effectiveness of retardant treatment on PU foam can wear off over time.

    The Swiss authorities say they cannot confirm what type of foam-padding was used in the bar and whether or not it complied with safety standards.

    In Friday’s press conference, officials talked about a “flashover” happening in the bar.

    Professor Galea explained this is what happens when hot gases rise to the ceiling, reach a critical temperature and then ignite the room near instantaneously.

    According to Michael Klippel, a fire safety expert at ETH Zurich University, “survival after flashover is very unlikely”.

    The authority responsible for overseeing fire safety inspections in Crans-Montana is the Office Cantonal du Feu (OCF) of the Canton of Valais. The inspections are carried out by local officials.

    Swiss authorities said in a press conference that inspections on a building the size of Le Constellation should have been carried out each year.

    BBC Verify has contacted the OCF to request access to previous inspection documents.

    Exit routes from the bar

    The authorities say they will also focus on exit routes at the bar, which sits across two levels – a ground floor and a basement. The fire is thought to have started in the basement, where the two images referred to above were taken.

    Videos filmed as the fire took hold show people trying to extinguish the flames before trying to get out of the basement up a narrow set of stairs.

    Prof Galea said staircase exits can be fatal bottlenecks with people tripping and getting trampled.

    He said even if there were other fire exits, panicked people in unfamiliar spaces were more likely to go out the way they came in.

    Officials also confirmed there was more than one exit from the building, but added they were “not currently able to say” whether the emergency exit was open or closed at the time.

    Valais state councillor Stéphane Ganzer said: “There is not just one door, even though at the time of the fire, it seems that most people left through the main entrance. But this building is a public place. It was obviously equipped with an emergency exit.”

    Pilloud told journalists that the two French managers of the bar had been interviewed as well as people who escaped the fire.

    One of the bar’s owners reportedly told local media the establishment had been inspected three times in the past ten years and that everything had been done according to regulations.

    Sparklers used before

    The investigators say they have also been analysing other videos of the venue.

    One video we found shows sparklers attached to bottles being used inside the bar as far back as 2024.

    YouTube An image taken from a YouTube video posted in 2024 which shows someone holding a bottle with a lit sparkler attached in the air in Le Constellation bar. YouTube

    A still image from a YouTube video posted in 2024 showing someone holding a bottle with a sparkler in Le Constellation bar.

    It shows women dressed in distinctive crash helmets carrying the bottles and pyrotechnics to customers, before detaching them and pouring drinks.

    The footage was uploaded to YouTube in May 2024 by the account @ConstellationCransMontana, though we can’t be certain when it was filmed.



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